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FORCE AND ENERGY

Force energy and Power What is a Force? A force makes something move, by pushing or pulling it. Gravity is an invisible force. Other forces, such as a kick, we can see, forces work in pairs. For every force pushing in one direction, there is an equal and opposite force pushing in the opposite direction.

What is energy? Energy takes many forms. Heat energy boils water, keeps us warm and drives engines. Chemical energy fuels cars. Electrical energy drives machines and keeps lights glowing. Light itself is a form of energy (see pp. 176-179) Almost every form of energy can be converted into other forms. But whatever form it is in, energy is essentially the capacity for making something happen, or doing work.

What is power? Power is the rate at which work is done. A high-powered engine is an engine that can move a great deal of weight very quickly. Power is also the rate at which energy is transferred. Al large amount of electric power might be needed to heat a large quantity of water.

What is Energy Efficiency? Some machines waste a great deal of energy, while other waste very little. The energy efficiency of a machine is measured by the proportion of energy it wastes. Waste energy is usually lost as heat.

Where does energy come from? Nearly all our energy comes from the sun. We get some directly by using solar power cells to trap the Suns heat. Most comes indirectly via fossil fuels (coal and oil) which got their energy from the fossilized plants of which they are made. The plants got their energy from the Sun by a process called photosynthesis (see p.244)

What is Friction?

Friction is the force between two things subbing together, which may be brake pads on a bicycle wheel (above) or air molecules against on aeroplane. Friction slows things down, making them hot as their momentum, or movement, is converted into heat.

ON the move How do things get moving? Things only move if forced to move. So when something starts moving, there must be a force involved, whether it is visible, like someone pushing, or gravity, which makes things fall. But one they are moving, things will carry on moving, things will carry on moving, things will carry on moving at the same speed and in the same direction until another force is applied typically friction.

What is uniform motion? Uniform motion is when an object carries on travelling at the same speed in the same direction. This is how space probe travels, when it is not being acted on by gravity or other forces.

What is a turning force? When something fixed in one place, called a fulcrum, is pushed or pulled elsewhere, it turns around the fulcrum. When you push a door shut, that push is the turning force, and the hinge is the fulcrum.

Whats the difference between velocity and speed? Speed is how fast something is going. Velocity is how fast something is going and in which direction. Speed is called a scalar quantity; velocity a vector.

Why do things go round? If only force is involved, things will always move in a straight line. This is called linear motion. Things go round when there is more than one force involved. A wheel goes round on its axle because there is one force trying to make it carry on in a straight line and another keeping it the same distance from the axle.

Gravity How does gravity hold down?

The mutual gravitational attraction between the mass of your body and the mass of the Earth pulls them together. If you jump off a wall, the earth pulls you towards the ground. You also pull the earth towards you, but because you are tiny and the earth is huge, you move a lot and the earth barely moves at all.

How fast does a stone fall? At first the stone falls faster and faster at a rate of 9.8metres per second at every second. But as the stones speed accelerates, air resistance increases until it becomes so great that the stone cannot fall any faster. It now continues to fall at the same velocity, called the terminal velocity.

What the difference between mass and weight? Mass is the amount of matter in an object. It is the same wherever you measure it, even on the moon. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object. It various according to where you measure it.

Why do satellites go round the earth? Satellites are whizzing through space at exactly the right height for their speed. The earths gravity tries to pull them down to earth, but they are travelling so fast that they go on zooming round the Earth just as fast as the earth pulls them in.

Does gravity vary? An Objects gravitational pull various with its mass and its distance. In fact, gravity diminishes precisely in proportion to its distance away, squared. You can work out the force of gravity between two objects by multiplying their masses and dividing by the square of the distance between them. This sum works all over the Universe.

Why can we jump higher on the moon? The moon is much smaller than the Earth, so its gravity is much weaker. Astronauts weigh six times less on the moon than they do on earth, and can jump much higher.

Heat How is temperature measured?

Temperature is usually measured with a thermometer. Some thermometers have a metal strip that bends according to how hot it is. But most contain a liquid, such mercury, in tube. As it gets warmer, the liquid expands and its level expands, and its level rises in the tube. The level of the liquid indicates the temperature.

What is the difference between heat and temperature? Heat is molecules moving. It is a form of energy, the combined energy of all the moving molecules. Temperature, on the other hand, is simply a measure of how fast all the molecules are moving.

What is absolute zero? Absolute zero is the coldest possible temperature, the temperature at which atoms stop moving altogether. This happens at 273.150 C, or 0 on the Kelvin scale.

What is the highest temperature ever recorded? The highest temperature ever measured is 2 billion 0C it happened in a nuclear fusion experiment in the USA. The highest air temperature ever recorded in 580C in Libya. Earths lowest air temperature ever measured was 890C. It was recorded in Antarctica and the lowest temperature ever measured was half a billionth of a degree above absolute zero.

How do you convert Fahrenheit to Celsius? You can convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius by subtracting 32 then dividing by nine and multiplying by five. You can convert from Celsius to Fahrenheit by dividing by five, multiplying by nine and adding 2

What is conduction? Conduction is one of the three ways in which heat moves. It involves heat spreading from hot areas to cold areas as moving particles knock into one another. The other ways are convection, in which warm air or water rises, and radiation, which is rays of light.

What is light?

What is wavelength?

Light travels in a wave-like manner Wavelength. This is shown by a prism, which refracts (bends) light. The longer the wavelength of light, the more it is refracted, so long wavelength colures emerge from the prism at a different point short wavelength colours.

What the fastest thing in the universe? Light, which travel at 300,000kilometers per second? This is the one speed in the Universe that is constant that is, it is always the same no matter how fast you are going when you measure it.

What are photons? Photons are almost infinitesimally small particles of light. They have no mass and there are billions of them in a single beam of light.

What are the colors of the rainbow? The colours of the rainbow are all the colours contained in white light. When white light hits raindrops in the air, it is split up in the same manner as when it passes through a prism. The colours of the rainbow appear in this order; red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet.

Why is the sky blue? The sky appears to be blue because air molecules scatter reflect in all directions-more blue from sunlight towards our eyes than the other colours of visible light.

When is the sun red? The sun is only red at sunrise and sunset, when the Sun is low in the sky and sunlight reaches us only after passing a long way through the dense lower layers of the atmosphere. Particles in the air absorb shorter, bluer wavelengths of light or reflect them away from u s, leaving, just the red.

What does light work? How is light bent? Light rays are bent when they are refracted. This happens when they strike a transparent material like glass or water, at an angle. The different materials slow the light waves down so that they slew round, like car wheels driving on to sand.

How do objects absorb light? When light rays hit a surface, some bounce off, but others are absorbed by atoms in the surface, each kind of atom absorbs particular wavelengths, or colors of light. You see a leaf as green because it has soaked up all colours except green, and you see only the reflected green light.

How do your eyes see things? Light sources such as the sun and electric light shine light rays straight into your eyes. Everything else you see only by reflected light, that is, by light rays that bounce off things. So you can see things only if there is a light source throwing light onto them. Otherwise, they just look black.

Does light travel in waves? In the lost century, most scientists believed light travels in tiny waves rather than bullet-like particles. Now they agree it can be both, and it is probably best to think of light as vibrating packets of energy.

How do fibre-optic cables work? These cables dons bend light, but reflect it round corners. Inside a cable are lots of bundles of glass fibres. Light rays zig-zag along the inside of each fibre, reflecting first off one side, then the other. In this way, light can be transmitted through the cable no matter what route it takes.

How do Mirrors work? Most mirrors are made of ordinary glass, but the back is silvered coated with a shiny metal that perfectly reflects all the light that hits it- at exactly the same angle. The image in a mirror is notl, in fact, back-to-front. Left is on the left, and right is on the right - which is the opposite of how we look to someone who is facing us.

Electromagnetic spectrum

Who made the first radio broadcast? Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi first sent radio signals over 1600metres in 1895. In 1898, he sent a message in Morse code across the English Channel (Morse code uses rhythms of short and long sounds to represent letters and numerals) in 1901 he sent a radio message across the Atlantic Ocean.

How do CT scans work? CT (Computed tomography) scans run X-ray beams right round the body, and pick up how much is absorbed with special sensors. A computer analyses the data to create a complete slice through the body.

How do TV signals travel? TV signals travel in one of three ways. Terrestrial broadcasts are beamed out from transmitters (right) as radio waves to be picked up by TV aerials. Satellite broadcasts are sent up to satellites as microwaves, then picked up b y satellite dishes. Cable broadcasts travel as electrical or light signals along underground cables, straight to the TV set.

How do X-rays pass through you? X-rays are stopped only by the bones and especially dense bits of the body. They pass through the soft bits to hit a photographic plate on the far side of the body, where they leave a silhouette of the skeleton.

What is infrared? Infrared is light with wavelengths too long for the human eye to register. But you can often feel infrared light as warmth.

Why cant you see ultraviolet? Ultraviolet light is light with wavelengths too short for the human eye to register.

Electricty

What is an Electric Current? A current is a continuous stream of electrical charge. It happens only when there is a complete, unbroken circuit for the current to flow through typically a loop of cooper wire.

What makes lightning flash? Lightning flashes produce 100 million volts of static electricity. Lightning is created when raindrops and ice crystals inside a thundercloud become electrically charged as they are flung together, losing or

gaining electrons from each other. Negatively charged particles build up at the clouds base, and then discharge as lightning.

How do electric currents flow? The charge in an electric current is electrons that have broken free from their atoms; none of those moves very far, but the current is passed as they bang into each other like rows of marbles.

What is a volt? Electrical current flows as long as there is a difference in charge between two points in the circuit. This difference is called a potential and is measured in terms of volts. The bigger the difference, the bigger the voltage.

What is resistance? Not all substances conduct electric currents equally well resistance is a substances ability to block a flow of electric current. Insurance, such as the plastic around electrical wires, are used for this reason.

What makes your hair stand on end? When you comb dry hair, electrons are knocked off the atoms in the comb. Your hair is coated with these negative electrical charges and is attracted to anything positively charged. The same effect occurs if you rub against plastic (right)

Using Electricty What is Semiconductor? Semiconductors are materials, such as silicon or germanium which are party resistant to electric current and partly conducting. They can be set up so that the conductivity is switched on or off, creating a tiny electrical switched on or off, creating a tiny electrical switch. They are used to make silicon chips, and so are essential to electronics.

What are the best conductors? The best conductors are metals like copper and silver. Water is also a good conductor. Superconductors are materials like aluminum which is cooled until it transmits electricity almost without resistance.

How does a light bulb work? An electric bulb has a very thin filament of tungsten wire inside a glass bulb filled with argon or nitrogen gas. When current flows through such a thin wire, the resistance is so great that the wire heats up and glows brightly.

How does a generator work? An electricity generator uses mechanical energy to create electrical energy. Many generators use electromagnetic induction, in which a coil of conducting wire, such as copper wire, is spun around inside a magnet. This causes electrons in the wire to move creating a current.

What is a silicon chip? A silicon chip (below) is an electronic circuit implanted in a small crystal of semiconducting silicon, in such a way that it can be manufactured in huge numbers. This was the predecessor to the microprocessors that make computer work.

What is AC? AC means alternating current Electricity in the home is alternating current, which means it continually swaps direction as the generators coil spins around past its electrodes.

What is a magnetic pole? Metals such as iron and nickel can expert particularly powerful magnetism. This force is especially strong at each end of the magnet. These two powerful ends are called poles poles. One is called the north (or north seeking) pole, because if the magnet is suspended freely this pole swings round until it points north.

What is a lodestone? Thousands of years before people learned how to make steel magnets, they found that lumps of certain types of rock can attract or repel each other, or bits of iron. These rocks are called lodestones. They contain iron oxide, which them naturally magnetic.

Why is the earth like a magnet?

As the earth spins, the swirling of its iron turns the crore into a giant magnet. It is a little like the way a bicycle dynamo generates an electric current. Like smaller magnets, the Earths magnet has two poles, a north and a south. It is because earth is a magnet that small magnets always points in the same direction if allowed to swivel freely.

How big is the earths magnetic field? The Earths magnetic field is called the magnetosphere and extends about 70,000 kilometers towards the sun.

What is a magnetic field? The magnetic field is the area around the magnet in which its effect is felt. It gets gradually weaker farther away from the magnet. The strength of a magnetic field is measured in teslas, named after the scientist Nikola Tesla.

Which materials make the strongest magnets? Due to the arrangement of their electrons, metals such as iron, nickel and cobalt make strong magnets. These metals are also highly attracted to magnets.

Sound How does sound travel? When a sound source vibrates to and fro, it pushes the air around it to and fro. The sound travels through the air as it is pushed to and fro in a knock-on effect. This moving stretch and squeeze of air is called a sound wave.

What is Resonance? An object always tends to vibrate freely at the same rate. This is its natural frequency. You can make it vibrate faster or slower by jogging it at particular intervals. But if you can jog it at just the same rate as its natural frequency, it vibrates in sympathy and the vibrations become stronger. This is resonance.

What is sound frequency?

Some sounds, like a whistle, are high-pitched, Others, like a drum, are low-pitched. What makes them different is the frequency of the sound waves. If the sound waves follow rapidly after each other, they are high frequency and make a high sound. If the waves are far apart, they are low frequency and make a low sound.

What is volume? The volume of a sound is also called its amplitude. This is the amount of pressure exerted by a sound source on air molecules. The higher the pressure, the harder the molecules will collide and the farther they will travel.

What is an ECHO? An example of an echo is when you shout in a tunnel and you hear the noise bouncing back at you a moment later as the sound waves rebound. Echoes only bounce back clearly off smooth, hard surfaces in.

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